Dodgers 5, Marlins 3: It’s Scott Van Slyke’s World

Zack Greinke pitched a gem through six innings, but he ran into trouble in the seventh. Marcell Ozuna tied it up out of nowhere with a bomb of a homer to left, which is what hitters like him do. Then two consecutive singles and a walk setup a bases loaded situation and Scott Van Slyke heroics.

It was a really really really close play, but it seemed like he was out by literally about an inch, and it wasn’t something that was gonna be overturned.

An anxious Greinke reminded the umpire and Marlins that their time was up:

All said and done, Greinke pitched seven innings in 91 pitches, surrendering just the single run, and gave up six hits and two walks while striking out five.

Bonus Greinke quote:

Asked by @THEREAL_DV if Dee Gordon's speed was his focus pregame Greinke said,"Not too much, actually. He gets caught more than most people.

The Dodgers themselves didn’t have much luck on offense though. They scored their first run on a fielder’s choice grounder by Justin Turner that scored Howie Kendrick in the bottom of the fourth, and their second came from a Joc single (!!!) up the middle to plate SVS.

The team did have other chances to score, like in the bottom of the fifth with runners on the corner and one out. Jimmy Rollins, who can’t buy a break, smoked a liner to right that Giancarlo Stanton made an amazing play on. Sac fly should’ve been the worst-case scenario, but instead Joc Pederson got caught napping and was doubled up at first before SVS could score from third.

I wrote Bill Plaschke‘s column for him:

Will Joc's poor decision making and love of hep-hap music cost the Dodgers in the playoffs? My column: